From concept to reality: How blockchain will reshape the financial services industry

For now, real-life use of blockchain technology is still limited. Its current use is mostly to be seen in the bitcoins— virtual currency created with blockchain technology—that cross borders with negligible regulation. Incumbent banks, asset managers, insurers and technology firms are keen to experiment with the new technology. Their initial trials focus on niche areas of trade finance, payment settlements and reconciliation. While interest in applying the technology is growing, widespread implementation may take years.

Green Finance: Making the Transition to a Climate-Resilient Future

Green finance is the financing of investments that provide environmental benefits in the broader context of environmentally sustainable development. It includes all forms of investment, both debt and equity, which protect the environment, conserve natural resources and help mitigate or adapt to a changing climate. It is used in the implementation of ‘green’ infrastructure plans which aid in delivering energy security and other productivity increasing measures such as improved human health.
 

Green Finance: Making the Transition to a Climate-Resilient Future

Green finance is the financing of investments that provide environmental benefits in the broader context of environmentally sustainable development. It includes all forms of investment, both debt and equity, which protect the environment, conserve natural resources and help mitigate or adapt to a changing climate. It is used in the implementation of ‘green’ infrastructure plans which aid in delivering energy security and other productivity increasing measures such as improved human health.
 

A Digital Future: Financial Services and the Generation Game

 It assesses how people’s expectations of their financial services providers are changing and how technology must be deployed to meet them. The report is based on extensive desk research and in-depth interviews, conducted in August-October 2017 with 14 representatives of financial institutions and companies.

New Communication With Public Sector Workers: Challenges and Rewards

For administrators of public sector retirement plans, benefits communications and financial education is a necessity that only grows with time. Gone are the days when word of mouth in the coffee room would be sufficient to instill in younger workers a sense of the value in their benefits. Gone too, in most systems, are the days when a pension might fill all of their financial needs. Instead, public workers engage with multiple benefits options, and they need financial knowledge and tools to build a secure retirement.

Green Fintech Catapult

The UK needs a new coordinated effort on green fintech to unlock the data and information needed to green our financial system.

The day of the MiFID II

MiFID II, one of the biggest market structure overhauls in history, could radically alter the investment landscape.

Financial regulatory reform in uncertain times

No rest for the weary

A decade on from the global financial crisis, are policymakers and regulators starting to tire of imposing a seemingly endless drip-feed of new rules on financial services firms? With his regular warnings on the dangers of “reform fatigue”, Financial Stability Board (FSB) chairman Mark Carney certainly appears to think so.

Third-Party Risks: The Cyber Dimension

Executives were drawn from 19 different sectors, including aerospace/defence, agriculture and agribusiness, automotive, chemicals, construction and real estate, consumer goods, education, energy and natural resources, entertainment, media and publishing, financial services, government/public sector, healthcare, pharmaceuticals and biotechnology, IT and technology, logistics and distribution, manufacturing, professional services, retailing, telecommunications, transport, travel and tourism.

The Road to Action: Financial regulation addressing climate change

The cost of inaction: Recognising the value at risk from climate change, a July 2015 report written by The Economist Intelligence Unit (The EIU) and sponsored by Aviva, identified the need for a framework to govern the disclosure of climate-related financial risk.

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